By now you may have seen the photo of a newborn clutching the Mirena IUD shortly after birth. I’m sure we were all thinking the same thing. Was that baby born holding the IUD. Did he rip it out and then hold on to it while in the womb? Could such a thing happen? Well the answers are no, no and possibly. But not it this case. The image has been somewhat sensationalized but the true story is still a bit scary.

“I was scared at first, since I had a Mirena,” she says. “From what I had read online, the majority of IUD pregnancies are either not viable or end in miscarriage. I assumed I was only a few weeks along — eight weeks at the most.”

During that first ultrasound, doctors revealed she was about 18-weeks pregnant. They also couldn’t locate IUD and assumed it had fallen out.

“I was sure it was somewhere inside me still,” she said.

Because there is just a small chance(1%) that women using the Mirena IUD can get pregnant, she started adding the hashtag [#Mirenababy] with every belly pic and ultrasound pic she posted.

She was concerned, however, she would end up losing the baby. But her little guy had his own plan.

“I was overwhelmed with all kinds of emotions. I felt he was meant to be. His original due date was May 4 — Star Wars Day. Even my OB said, ‘The force is strong with this one.’”

A week before Dexter Benjamin Manuel Tyler arrived and so did the IUD.

“My OB and the majority of the nurses I saw during the remainder of my pregnancy assumed [my IUD] had just fallen out,” Lucy told Global News. “Shortly after he was born I heard my OB say, ‘I found your Mirena. It was behind the placenta.’”

Many news outlets have reported the baby was born holding the IUD, but Lucy says it was probably one of the nurses or his father’s idea to have him pose with it. After all, he was born despite it.

This is not the first time, the Mirena IUD has been in the spotlight for the wrong reasons. In 2014, lawsuits were filed in Canada and the U.S. against Bayer alleging that women weren’t properly warned about rare but potentially serious risks associated with the intrauterine device.

In 2013, it was reported to Health Canada that Mirena IUDs were responsible for 52 uterine perforations. Some women also revealed the device migrated to other parts of their bodies after insertion.